Jon Corzine on Foreign Policy

Democratic Jr Senator (NJ)

Opposes linking Human Rights to trade with China

I support China's entry into the World Trade Organization, but we should not grant China permanent normal trade relations until and unless it implements environmental, labor and safety standards. The annual review of our trading relationship with
China is the only leverage we have to achieve this.

According to the AFL-CIO, factories in China that export to the United States pay their workers between 13 cents and 35 cents an hour. We know prison labor is widespread.

Source: Speech: "World's Only Superpower", Feb. 28, 2000
Sep 19, 2000

Supports continuing Foreign Aid to Russia, Israel, & others

We must carefully and thoughtfully exercise our power and status as the world's sole superpower. We must be careful not to over-promise, while making clear we will protect our national interest. We should engage, support and participate around the
globe as a leader, not as a sole proprietor. We must be a leader with a guiding vision for world peace and prosperity and in promoting a community of nations. And we must be the balancing hand that encourages integrity in international relations.

Source: Speech: "World's Only Superpower", Feb. 28, 2000
Sep 19, 2000

Voted YES on enlarging NATO to include Eastern Europe.

H.R. 3167; Gerald B. H. Solomon Freedom Consolidation Act of 2001, To endorse the vision of further enlargement of the NATO Alliance. Vote to pass a bill that would support further expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, authorize military assistance to several eastern European countries and lift assistance restrictions on Slovakia.

Multi-year commitment to Africa for food & medicine.

Corzine sponsored the Hunger to Harvest bill:

In an effort to reduce hunger in sub-Saharan Africa, urges the President to:

set forth five-year and ten-year strategies to achieve a reversal of current levels of hunger and poverty in sub-Saharan Africa, including a commitment to contribute an appropriate U.S. share of increased bilateral and multilateral poverty-focused resources for sub-Saharan Africa, with an emphasis on health (including HIV-AIDS prevention and treatment), education, agriculture, private sector and free market development, democratic institutions and the rule of law, micro-finance development, and debt relief;
and

work with the heads of other donor countries and sub-Saharan African countries and with private and voluntary organizations and other civic organizations to implement such strategies; and calls for

Congress to undertake a multi-year commitment to provide the resources to implement those strategies; and

the Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development to report on such implementation.

Monitor human rights in Uganada-Sudan crisis.

support efforts for a peaceful resolution of the conflict in northern and eastern Uganda;

work with the Government of Uganda and the international community to make available sufficient resources to meet the relief and development needs of the towns and cities that are supporting large numbers of displaced people;

urge the leaders and members of the Lord's Resistance Army to stop the abduction of children, and urge all armed forces in Uganda to stop the use of child soldiers, and seek the release of all individuals who have been abducted;

urge the Government of Uganda to improve the professionalism of Ugandan military personnel currently stationed in northern and eastern Uganda, with an emphasis on respect for human rights and civilian protection;

work with the international community to assist and increase the capacity of Ugandan civil institutions to monitor the human rights situation in northern Uganda;

make clear that the relationship between Sudan and the United States cannot improve unless no credible evidence indicates that authorities of the Government of Sudan are providing support to the Lord's Resistance Army.